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Labor Pushes For Energy Jobs*

Labor Pushes Some Democrats To Vote for Bush Energy Plan

For Unions, Protecting Jobs Trumps Environmental Concerns

By Sarah Schafer

Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday, August 5, 2001; Page A08

Labor unions successfully leaned on several House Democrats to cross party
lines and vote in favor of President Bush's energy plan last week, a victory
that offers a glimpse into how organized labor is coming to terms with the
Republican administration it fought to keep out of power.

Two unions, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and the United Auto
Workers, lobbied hard in the House for provisions that would allow oil drilling
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska and set fuel efficiency
standards for cars and sport utility vehicles far below what environmentalists
had sought.

The unions argued that both measures would create or save jobs and were in
the best interests of their members. The Teamsters said the drilling provision
could mean more than 700,000 jobs for them. The United Auto Workers, which
did not weigh in on the drilling issue, estimated that thousands of their
best jobs would be lost if higher fuel efficiency standards prevailed because
demand for SUVs would plummet.

Labor's position on these issues put them in the Republican corner. The unions
persuaded enough Democrats to take their side and ensure passage of the energy
plan. Thirty-six Democrats, including Paul E. Kanjorski (Pa.), James L. Oberstar
(Minn.), and James E. Clyburn (S.C.) voted to support the drilling provision;
86 voted in favor of the legislation's provision on fuel standards.

Many of those Democrats said the Teamsters made an impressive pitch. They
armed themselves with information on new, more environmentally friendly drilling
technology, for example.

"I thought the way they conducted themselves that maybe they have more experience
[on the issue] than the environmentalists," said Clyburn, adding that he
did not have any one-on-one meetings with union officials and supported the
drilling provision early on.

After working so hard to defeat Bush and House Republicans in the last election
about 95 percent of the $83 million they spent in the 2000 elections went
to Democrats -- the unions have shown an increasing willingness to reach
out to Republicans whom they may have snubbed in the past, said some analysts.
Last week's event was an extreme example, but it highlights a shift in the
labor movement.

"I think there's more of a pragmatism in terms of their legislative approach,"
said Marshall Wittmann, of the conservative Hudson Institute, a policy research
group in Washington.

The Teamsters and the UAW have long acted as free agents, often angering
other unions in the AFL-CIO, the federation to which they belong with more
than 60 other unions. The Teamsters often side with Republicans on environmental
issues and sometimes break with the federation and openly curry favor with
the Republican Party. During the last election, as the AFL-CIO worked to
elect Al Gore, Teamsters President James Hoffa attended the Republican National
Convention.

But last week, despite protests from some of its unions loyal to the
environmental movement, the AFL-CIO sided with the Teamsters on the drilling
issue. Wittmann and others said the AFL-CIO's support, although it came late,
could signal that the group is more likely to follow the Teamsters and try
to work with congressional Republicans whom it has ignored in the past.

Many union members have met with moderate Republicans lately, Wittmann said.
"My understanding is that they've developed better relations with them,"
he said, but he added that it does not mean those Republicans can look forward
to labor support in the next election. "My sense is that labor is going to
look at their own self-interests first and maybe the Democratic party is
playing more of a second fiddle than they did in the past."

An AFL-CIO official, who requested anonymity, said it was unusual for the
federation to take a stand on an issue when its members were deeply divided,
as in the case of drilling in Alaska. But the official said the AFL-CIO decided
years ago at a convention to support drilling in Alaska, with certain
restrictions, and the Teamsters were able to persuade the AFL-CIO leadership
to speak out. "What we faced was a very passionate group," the official said.

Some in Congress were surprised by how effectively labor was able
to persuade Democrats to abandon environmentalists and cross party
lines.

"Labor's campaign was very persuasive for many of the Democrats that the
party had counted on for support and didn't get," said Alyson Heyrend, press
secretary for Rep. Jim Matheson (D-Utah), who voted against drilling.

But Jeff Faux, president of the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think
tank in Washington, said there will be few instances in the near future when
the interests of labor and Republicans jibe as well as they did this week.

He and others also doubt that labor will have as much success on these issues
in the Democratic-controlled Senate as it did in the House, especially on
the issue of drilling in Alaska, which the Senate Democratic leaders oppose.

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